The
recommendations people make to their friends and family carry more
weight than the messages companies put out on their own behalf.
According
to Nielsen’s 2013
“Global Survey of Trust in Advertising” (which surveyed more than 29,000
Internet users in 58 countries about 19 forms of paid, earned and owned
media), 84% of consumers worldwide say they
trust word-of-mouth recommendations from their trusted friends and
families -- an increase of 6% over the past six years.
Meanwhile, owned advertising -- in the form of content and messaging on brand-operated Web sites -- is the second most-trusted form of advertising -- trusted by 69% of survey respondents, up 9% since 2007. Coming in third were online customer views and opinions, trusted by 68% of worldwide consumers (up 7% from 2007).
Meanwhile, owned advertising -- in the form of content and messaging on brand-operated Web sites -- is the second most-trusted form of advertising -- trusted by 69% of survey respondents, up 9% since 2007. Coming in third were online customer views and opinions, trusted by 68% of worldwide consumers (up 7% from 2007).
Given
that recommendations from friends and family hold the highest trust
value (a status held since the inaugural
Trust in Advertising study from 2007), marketers would be wise to
incentivize customers to provide positive feedback and/or by referring
friends to the company, according to a Nielsen representative.
The high regard consumers have for branded Web sites is reflective of
consumers’ interest in more (and more detailed) information. Indeed,
having a Web site adds a level of
“legitimacy” to a brand, she says.
Although it did
not make the top three trusted forms of advertising, paid media --
particularly television advertising --
continued to remain strong. Sixty-two percent of consumers trusted
television advertising (up from 56% in 2007), while 60% trusted magazine
advertising (up 4% since 2007). Newspaper advertising was
the only format to decline over the past six years, to 61% from 63%.
In
keeping with their growing influence, online and mobile advertising
also saw sharp upticks in consumer
trust. More than half (56%) of consumers said they trusted e-mail
messaging (up 7% from 2007), while 48% trusted paid-search ads, online
video and social network advertising. Trust in banner
advertising jumped 16% since 2007 (to 42% in 2013). Forty-five percent
of respondents trusted mobile display advertising, while 37% trusted
mobile text advertising.
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